Menu



error This forum is not active, and new posts may not be made in it.
PromoteFacebookTwitter!
Luis Miguel Goitizolo

1162
61587 Posts
61587
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/8/2016 10:46:45 AM

Mystery of the TWO-HEADED sharks: The mutant fish are appearing at alarming rates - and no one knows why


    • ·
      The puzzling trend started in 2008, and numbers are on the rise
    • · It is unknown how long these mutants are able to survive in the wild
    • · What prompted the growing mutant numbers is a mystery to science
    • · Some suggest that over-fishing is encouraging more inbreeding in sharks


Two-headed sharks sound like a monster ripped straight out of a B-list horror movie, but scientists are increasingly finding more of them worldwide.

Some have suggested that the surge in mutants is due to genetic abnormalities triggered by over-fishing.

The puzzling trend started in 2008, when fisherman Christian Johnson caught a two-headed blue shark embryo off the coast of Australia.

Scroll down for video



The rising trend in two-headed shark sightings started in 2008, when fisherman Christian Johnston discovered this two-headed blue shark off the coast of Australia. Blue sharks produce a lot of two-headed offspring as they can carry up to 50 babies at a time in the womb

BICEPHALY - WHERE TWO HEADS ARE NOT BETTER THAN ONE

The condition of having more than one head is known as polycephaly, with two-headedness described specifically by the terms bicephaly or dicephaly.

The creatures rarely live beyond a few months.

Each head of a polycephalic animal has its own brain, and they share control of the organs and limbs, though the specific structure of the connections varies.

Such animals often move in a disoriented and dizzy fashion, with the brains 'arguing' with each other leading some specimens to simply zig-zag without getting anywhere.

In snakes, each head may attack and even attempt to swallow the other.

In 2013, a group of Floridian fishermen strained to haul in a large Bull shark, but upon gutting it found that its uterus housed a two-headed fetus.

Blue sharks have so far produced the most two-headed offspring, because they carry large litters of up to 50 babies at a time in the womb.

More recently, Spanish researchers have now found a two-headed Atlantic sawtail catshark embryo while rearing hundreds of sharks for human-health research.

An eagle-eyed scientist spotted it through one of the sharks' characteristic see-through eggs.

The resulting study has been published in the Journal of Fish Biology.

The catfish embryo was no ordinary mutant.

It is the first discovered example of a two-headed shark born by a oviparous shark species - a shark that lays eggs.


The researchers carefully opened the egg in order to study the strange embryo.

Study leader Professor Valentín Sans-Coma is unsure if the embryo would have survived had they left it to hatch naturally.

It is likely that these embryos don't live for long after hatching, which could explain why two-headed egg-laying sharks have never been found before.



In 2013, a group of Floridian fishermen strained to haul in a large Bull shark, but upon gutting it found that its uterus housed a two-headed fetus. Mutant shark findings have been on the rise over the past few years, and scientists are unsure as to why this may be

Two-headed bull shark has two hearts, two stomachs but one tail
Loaded: 0%
Progress: 0%
0:00
Previous
Play
Skip
Mute
Current Time0:00
/
Duration Time0:53
Fullscreen



What prompted this rising trend in two-headed shark discoveries currently remains a mystery to science.

While their numbers are rising, sightings are few and far between, making it difficult for researchers to pin down exactly what triggers the mythical mutation.

Professor Sans-Coma's team suggest that genetic mutations may be behind their catfish finding.

Their embryos are grown in a lab with almost 800 other specimens, meaning they were unlikely to have exposure to any mutating infections, chemicals or radiation.

Wild sharks' rising mutation rates could come from a variety of factors, including viral infections or pollution.



Some researchers have suggested that over-fishing may be responsible for rising numbers of two-headed sharks. As population numbers dwindle, the shark gene pool shrinks, giving rise to more inbreeding and hence rising numbers of birth defects

Some researchers have suggested that over-fishing may be the culprit.

As shark population numbers dwindle, their gene pool shrinks, giving rise to more inbreeding which carries a high risk of passing on crippling genetic abnormalities.

Marine scientist Nicolas Ehemann recently discovered the first two-headed shark ever found in the Caribbean Sea.

Ehemann speculates that the high prevalence of two-headed sharks in nature points to over-fishing as the likely origin.



Accessible specimens of mutated sharks are few and far between, making them difficult for scientists to study


A master's student at the National Polytechnic Institute in Mexico, Ehemann agrees that the shrinking shark gene pool brought about by fishing will likely lead to rising numbers of birth defects.

Researchers in Malaga also discovered a two-headed Atlantic sawtail catshark this week, which they believe is the first of its kind.

The creature was spotted during a study of 797 embryos, and researchers from the University of Malaga say the find is a first for the species.

While previous reports of mutant fish have usually been in blue sharks, which carry their offspring in the womb, the find is believed to be the first two-headed animal discovered which is an oviparous shark - those that develop inside an egg

But Dr Felipe Galván-Magaña, a marine scientist from the Instituto Politécnico Nacional in Mexico City, believes that the hysteria around two-headed sharks is misplaced.




Researchers in Malaga also discovered a two-headed Atlantic sawtail catshark this week, which they believe is the first of its kind

He argues that the numbers of these sharks aren't growing at all.

In fact, the surge in sightings results from the rising number of new scientific journals to publish in.

Dr Galván-Magaña is no stranger to mutant sharks.

A 'cyclops shark,' with a single, functioning eye, was caught off the coast of Mexico in 2011 and brought to his lab.

The defect was caused by a congenital condition called cyclopia, which can affect several animal species, including people.

Accessible specimens of mutated sharks are few and far between, making them challenging for scientists to study.

'I would like to study these things, but it's not like you throw out a net and you catch two-headed sharks every so often,' says Ehemann.

'It's random.'



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3905028/Mystery-TWO-HEADED-sharks-mutant-fish-appearing-alarming-rates-no-one-knows-why.html#ixzz4PPdQYqaT
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook



"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

+1
Luis Miguel Goitizolo

1162
61587 Posts
61587
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/8/2016 2:03:24 PM

Giant snowballs appear on Russian beach in Siberia


5 November 2016

Image copyrightSERGEI BYCHENKOV
Image captionNatural snowballs of varying sizes have covered part of the Gulf of Ob

A strange and beautiful sight greeted locals in the Gulf of Ob, in northwest Siberia, after thousands of natural snowballs formed on the beach.

An 11-mile (18km) stretch of coast was covered in the icy spheres.

The sculptural shapes range from the size of a tennis ball to almost 1m (3ft) across.

They result from a rare environmental process where small pieces of ice form, are rolled by wind and water, and end up as giant snowballs.

Locals in the village of Nyda, which lies on the Yamal Peninsula just above the Arctic Circle, say they have never seen anything to compare to them.


Image copyrightEKATERINA CHERNYKH
Image captionLocals in the frosty region say the ice balls were a complete surprise

Image copyrightALEXEI PRIMAK
Image captionAlexei Primak captured an amazing "snowball wall" formed from the melting spheres



The village of Nyda lies just above the Arctic Circle

Russian TV quoted an explanation from Sergei Lisenkov, press secretary of the Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute:

"As a rule, first there is a primary natural phenomenon - sludge ice, slob ice. Then comes a combination of the effects of the wind, the lay of the coastline, and the temperature and wind conditions.

"It can be such an original combination that it results in the formation of balls like these."

A similar phenomenon was witnessed in the Gulf of Finland in December 2014, and on Lake Michigan in December 2015, the Ura.ru website said.

Pictures of the snowballs have charmed Russians online. A reader of the TJournal news site calling himself "Anton Antonov" joked: "Soon the peninsula will be invaded by hatched snowsaurs!"


(BBC News)


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

+1
Luis Miguel Goitizolo

1162
61587 Posts
61587
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/8/2016 2:33:31 PM
Mo. man kills 4- and 5-year-old sons and then himself in murder-suicide, police say

Chris Cadenbach

hace aproximadamente 5 meses

Christopher Cadenbach met his mother, Diane, and his two sons, 5-year-old Ethan and 4-year-old Owen, for what police called a “pleasant day at the park” in St. Louis County on Saturday afternoon.

The elder son was in kindergarten at West Elementary, in Washington, Mo. The younger was in preschool.

Cadenbach’s estranged wife and the boys’ mother, Elisa Sartorius-Cadenbach, told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that he was always “a very attentive, loving, over-the-top caring individual for these boys.”

That changed Saturday in the most horrible way.

Police say two boys were shot dead by their father Nov. 5. Christopher Cadenbach then turned the gun on himself as authorities closed in. (Reuters)

Sartorius-Cadenbach had accused Cadenbach of domestic abuse after she told him she wanted a divorce. She said he hurt her twice in the past nine days and sent a photograph of her bruised face to a friend, who forwarded it to police.

In response, officers went searching for Cadenbach on Saturday, while he was at the park, the Post-Dispatch reported.

He seemed to be aware of the search.

He told his mother that he “wasn’t going to be taken alive” and planned to commit “suicide by cop,” St. Louis County officialstold KMOV-TV. At about 6:30 p.m., he took her Ford Focus, loaded his sons into it and sped off, leaving her behind.

His mother called police, who issued an Amber Alert.

After nearly an hour, a St. Louis County park ranger noticed the car in Cliff Cave Park along the Mississippi River, just before 8 p.m. The ranger called reinforcements, and a county police helicopter approached the scene. From the air, they watched a man walk toward the car.

Gunshots immediately followed.

“He was shooting his children,” St. Louis County Deputy Chief Ken Cox told the Post-Dispatch.

Police engaged Cadenbach in what Cox said was a “pitch-black” scene.

But police said Cadenbach, 43, first fatally shot Ethan and Owen, then himself.

“It’s heartbreaking,” Chuck Cathers, a neighbor, told KMOV. “That’s all I can say. It’s heartbreaking.”

“This is a quiet neighborhood. We come down here to the park all the time. We were just down here a couple weeks ago for Homecoming for our daughter,” he said.

The day after the murder-suicide, the boys’ bright orange jack-o-lantern candy baskets rested on a wooden bench in front of their house. Their baseball gloves sat next to them, leaning on their father’s large glove.

“I don’t feel like anyone thought he would be capable of this,” Sartorius-Cadenbach told the Post-Dispatch.

She said he did it as an act of revenge.

“I think that he snapped and knew that he was facing a lot of jail time,” she said. “And he did this to hurt me, and I guess as revenge for me for pressing charges against him. He was trying to get back at me and hurt me the best way he knew how.”

She said while Cadenbach was often the life of the party, at home, he was often a different person.

“Everybody loved him,” she told the newspaper. “They thought he was the greatest guy on the face of the earth.”

But privately, she said, he was slowly becoming obsessed with conspiracy theories about Freemasons and Illuminati and boiling over with rage. As time passed, his anger grew.

Some noticed, such Rick Marquart, who ran Marquart’s Landing, where Cadenbach held a regular trivia night.

“I could sense anger when someone questioned him on an answer,” Marquart said. “I sensed a little sarcasm. But I couldn’t imagine that guy doing something like that.”

“He’s been this way for nine years, but I think it’s gotten worse,” Sartorius-Cadenbach said. “Our stress level was raised after we had Ethan and Owen; our home life was definitely more stressful with two younger children, which I think led to more stress and arguments.”

One of their recurring arguments centered on the fact that she, as a nurse, was the family’s breadwinner. Aside from his trivia night, Cadenbach only had a photography hobby that brought in little money.

As a result, Sartorius-Cadenbach said, “[I was] constantly walking on eggshells.”

“If he’s in a good mood, the rest of the household will be in a good mood,” Sartorius-Cadenbach said. “But if he’s pissed off it reflects on the kids and the family.”

Others mostly had good impressions of Cadenbach.

“He would be out there with his boys all the time,” John Rothermel a neighbor, told the Post-Dispatch. “He used to teach them how to do woodwork projects. It looks like he was good to his kids, from a distance.”

The most heartbreaking part, Sartorius-Cadenbach said, was how much the boys cared for their father.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

+1
Luis Miguel Goitizolo

1162
61587 Posts
61587
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/8/2016 3:11:14 PM

The Navy can't fire its awesome new gun because the rounds cost nearly $1 million each

Paul Szoldra
Business Insider


zumwalt long range projectile

(Lockheed Martin)
The US Navy can't fire its awesome new gun that can hit a target more than 70 miles away because the rounds are costing the service nearly a million bucks a piece.

Just a couple weeks after the Navy commissioned its most advanced warship, the USSZumwalt (DDG-1000), the service says it won't be buying any more of the guided precision munitions the ship's Advanced Gun Systems uses, called the Long Range Land-Attack Projectile (LRLAP).

The 155mm round is "the most accurate and longest-range guided projectile" in Navy history, according to Lockheed Martin. It's also one of the most expensive, with the price of each round costing roughly $800,000 to $1 million, for a total cost of around $2 billion if the service purchased its planned buy of 2,000 rounds, Sam LaGrone of USNI reported.

The Navy wasn't expecting the exorbitant cost when it first began producing the advanced Zumwalt-class destroyers.

It originally planned to build 32 of the stealth ships, but cost overruns led the service to eventually reduce the number down to just three. That reduction in the number of ships also led the cost of its ammunition to rise, Defense News reported.

“We were going to buy thousands of these rounds,” a Navy official familiar with the program told the site. “But quantities of ships killed the affordable round.”

USS Zumwalt 1

(U.S. Navy)

The Navy is now looking for alternative rounds that can be fired out of the AGS system, though its possible a replacement will not be found by the time the Zumwalt finishes sea trials and is integrated into the fleet by 2018. The service is looking at a number of alternative rounds, though a replacement could be tricky since the gun was built specifically for the LRLAP round.

The rounds aren't the only budget-busting item, however. The three Zumwalt-class ships themselves — the newly-commissioned USS Zumwalt, and not-yet-commissionedMichael Monsoor and Lyndon B. Johnson — cost about $4 billion each.

The Navy did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

(Yahoo Finance)

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

+1
Luis Miguel Goitizolo

1162
61587 Posts
61587
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/8/2016 3:28:55 PM

Former GOP senator announces Clinton vote: ‘Trump could get us into a nuclear war’

Yahoo News


Former Sen. Gordon Humphrey. (Screenshot: YouTube)

A staunchly Republican voice in New Hampshire announced Sunday that he’s backing Hillary Clinton for president.

“On Tuesday, millions of lifelong Republicans will vote against Donald Trump. I’m one of them,” declared Gordon Humphrey, a former U.S. senator who served more than two decades in that chamber. He made the comments in a video released by the Democratic nominee’s campaign.

The Boston Globe described Humphrey’s vote as a “stunning development,” given the former senator’s conservative ideology and support for tea party groups. Many anti-Trump Republicans, including Sen. Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H., have said they will cast a write-in vote for a fellow conservative as an alternative to voting for either Trump or Clinton.

But Humphrey said the risk of a Trump presidency is too great to vote for anyone but Clinton.

“Trump’s attacks on women, the disabled, war heroes and minorities are disgusting. A normal person doesn’t do that. But Trump is not normal. He’s cruel. He’s shameless. He’s a bully. And it gets worse. Trump is simply unfit to be president. Do we want a commander in chief who’s temperamental, belligerent, unhinged?” he asked.

He continued: “Trump could get us into a nuclear war. That danger has not gone away, and it would mushroom with Trump’s finger on the nuclear trigger. For the sake of our families’ safety, let’s stand together against Donald Trump by voting for Hillary Clinton. It’s the responsible thing to do.”

Humphrey represented New Hampshire in the Senate between 1979 and 1990. Humphrey backed Ohio Gov. John Kasich in the primary, but has long been critical of Trump. Over the summer, he called the GOP nominee a “sociopath.”

Watch the Clinton campaign video featuring him below.




(Yahoo News)

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

+1